1 / 5

AUSA Conference 2009 Training for Full Spectrum Operations

AUSA Conference 2009 Training for Full Spectrum Operations. LTG Thomas G. Miller LTG Mark P. Hertling MG James L. Huggins, Jr. COL (P) Paul Funk II COL Mark McKnight. Agenda. Introduction Readiness Reporting Update Integrated Training Environment (ITE)

nyla
Télécharger la présentation

AUSA Conference 2009 Training for Full Spectrum Operations

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. AUSA Conference 2009Training for Full Spectrum Operations LTG Thomas G. Miller LTG Mark P. Hertling MG James L. Huggins, Jr. COL (P) Paul Funk II COL Mark McKnight

  2. Agenda Introduction Readiness Reporting Update Integrated Training Environment (ITE) Progression Towards BCTPFull Spectrum Exercises FSO in combat from a DIV CG perspective LTG Thomas G. Miller Commanding General, First Army MG James L. Huggins, Jr. Director of Readiness and Mobilization, ODCS, G3/5/7, US Army COL (P) Paul Funk II Commander, CAC-T COL Mark McKnight Commander, BCTP LTG Mark P. Hertling Training and Executing DCG, Initial Military Training, TRADOC

  3. SPECTRUM OF CONFLICT Increasing Violence OPERATIONAL THEMES FULL SPECTRUM OPERATIONS Offense Offense Stability Offense Stability Offense Stability Defense Defense Stability Defense Defense Training for Full Spectrum Operations Stable Peace Unstable Peace General War Insurgency (Under Revision) FSO occurs across the spectrum, with any combination of operations – the level of effort in each operation varies

  4. How We Train - Tomorrow • CSA: “We need to leverage the combat experience of our Army…We can and must train differently than we did before 9/11” • Do a few key tasks very well • Train smart and balance with the need to rest a seasoned force • Decentralize and reduce training overhead at home station • Maximize use of mobile training teams and distributed learning Commanders agree on how FSO METL is trained, on conditions, and risks associated with not training on tasks FSO METL Training Initially focus on STD FSO METL At LAD - 9 months deployed mission environment Maintain focus on FSO METL for deployed environment Dwell more than 18 months Dwell less than 18 months Our challenge is to set conditions to train FSO, anywhere along the spectrum, at home station and CTCs

  5. Reserve Component Full Spectrum Training Challenges • Complexities • Varied mission sets • Full Spectrum Operations • Non-Standard (SECFOR) • Homeland Security (CCMRF) • State missions • Challenges • Manning shortfalls/turbulence • Available time • Training enablers • Equipping/Training sets • Ability to achieve aggregate collective proficiency Reset Year 1 Train/Ready 1 Year 2 Train/Ready 2 Year 3 Train/Ready 3 Year 4 Available Available Reserve Component ARFORGEN CYCLE 1:4 Reconstitution Family Time Equipment & Personnel Reset Individual & Crew Training New Equipment Training Battle Command and Staff Training Platoon Maneuver and BCT Staff Proficiency BWFX/LTP Company and BCT Staff Proficiency Post MOB Training MRE CTC Assume Mission Sustain Capability NOS Requires implementation concepts for Reserve Components

More Related